A gas turbine having a rotor which includes a turbine rotor, a shaft and a compressor rotor, the turbine rotor having at least one rotor disk and a rotor cone leading from the or a rotor disk to the shaft, the downstream end of the shaft being rotatably supported in a bearing having a bearing chamber, the interior space of the shaft being designed as a flow channel for bearing-chamber sealing air, and the space surrounding the rotor cone upstream of the same being designed as a flow space for cooling air is disclosed. In the region of the rotor connection, the shaft exhibits an expanded portion, at whose upstream end, openings are provided to allow cooling air to enter, and, at whose downstream end, openings are provided to allow cooling air to exit into the space between the bearing chamber and the rotor cone, a wall separating the streams of the cooling air and of the sealing air in the shaft interior from one another.
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1. A gas turbine comprising:
a rotor including a turbine rotor, a shaft and a compressor rotor, the turbine rotor having at least one bladed rotor disk and a rotor cone leading from the at least one rotor disk to the shaft, a downstream end of the shaft being rotatably supported in a bearing having a bearing chamber, an interior space of the shaft being designed as a flow channel for sealing air leading to the bearing chamber, and a space surrounding the rotor cone upstream of the rotor cone being designed as a flow space for cooling air used for cooling the rotor blades,
wherein, in a region of a connection of the rotor cone, the shaft has an expanded portion having an enlarged inside and outside diameter, and at an upstream end of the expanded portion, openings are provided to allow the cooling air to enter into an expanded interior space of the shaft and, at a downstream end of the expanded portion, other openings are provided to allow the cooling air to exit into a further space between the bearing chamber and the rotor cone, the expanded interior space being sealed from the a further interior space of the shaft by a wall for separating the cooling air and the sealing air,
wherein the expanded portion is integrally formed with the downstream end of the shaft.
19. A gas turbine comprising:
a rotor including a turbine rotor, a shaft rotating with the turbine rotor and a compressor rotor, the turbine rotor having at least one bladed rotor disk and a rotor cone leading from the at least one rotor disk to the shaft, a downstream end of the shaft being rotatably supported on an outside surface in a bearing having a bearing chamber, an interior space of the shaft being designed as a flow channel for sealing air leading to the bearing chamber, and a space surrounding the rotor cone upstream of the rotor cone being designed as a flow space for cooling air used for cooling the rotor blades,
wherein, in a region of a connection of the rotor cone, the shaft has an expanded portion having an enlarged inside and outside diameter, and at an upstream end of the expanded portion, openings are provided to allow the cooling air to enter into an expanded interior space of the shaft, and, at a downstream end of the expanded portion, other openings are provided to allow the cooling air to exit into a further space between the bearing chamber and the rotor cone, the expanded interior space being sealed from a further interior space of the shaft by a wall for separating the cooling air and the sealing air,
wherein the expanded portion is integrally formed with the downstream end of the shaft.
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Priority is claimed to German Patent Application DE 10 2007 023 380.0, filed May 18, 2007 through international application PCT/DE2008/000758, filed May 2, 2008, the entire disclosures of which are hereby incorporated by reference herein
The present invention relates to a gas turbine having a rotor which includes a turbine rotor, a shaft and a compressor rotor and, in the case of a multi-shaft gas turbine, is part of the low-pressure system, the turbine rotor having at least one bladed rotor disk and a rotor cone leading from the or a rotor disk to the shaft, and the downstream end of the shaft being rotatably supported in a bearing having a bearing chamber, the interior space of the shaft being designed as a flow channel for sealing air that leads to the bearing chamber, and the space surrounding the rotor cone upstream of the same being designed as a flow space for the cooling air used for cooling the rotor blades.
To fulfill the required specifications, future engine concepts call for high-speed, low-pressure turbines having high AN values, high turbine inlet temperatures and compact, short designs. To avoid hot gas ingress from the main stream, and to adjust the bearing thrust at the fixed bearing of the low-pressure system, air must be directed to the cavity between the last turbine stage and the turbine exhaust case (TEC). To optimally design this turbine disk, a thermally compensated design (avoidance of axial temperature gradients) is essential. In the case of low-pressure turbines that have been implemented in practice, this air is typically drawn off at the low-pressure compressor and routed through the low-pressure turbine shaft to the rear TEC bearing chamber. This air is used as sealing air at the bearing and for venting the rear cavity. Due to the restricted sealing air temperature (risk of oil fire, coking, etc.), the temperature of this sealing air is substantially colder than that of the cooling air which acts upon the opposite side of the rotor disk. As a result, an axial temperature gradient forms over the disk which complicates the task of providing a weight-optimized design for the rotor disk of the rotor connection. Due to the substantially inwardly drawn disk bodies required for high-speed engine concepts, and the compact design, only a very short rotor cone is possible for connection to the shaft. This reduced decay length makes the mechanical design (low-cycle fatigue lifetime) difficult. In particular, a sharp temperature gradient over the rotor cone of the shaft connection and at the corresponding disk is no longer acceptable.
The routing of the air in the case of a conventional low-pressure turbine is illustrated exemplarily in
In contrast, the object of the present invention is to devise a gas turbine having a rotor which includes a turbine rotor, a shaft and a compressor rotor and, in the case of a multi-shaft gas turbine, is part of the low-pressure system; a long service life being achieved by providing a thermally compensated design in the region of the turbine rotor and its shaft connection.
This objective is achieved by a gas turbine having a rotor which includes a turbine rotor, a shaft and a compressor rotor and, in the case of a multi-shaft gas turbine, is part of the low-pressure system, the turbine rotor having at least one bladed rotor disk and a rotor cone leading from the or a rotor disk to the shaft, and the downstream end of the shaft being rotatably supported in a bearing having a bearing chamber, the interior space of the shaft being designed as a flow channel for sealing air that leads to the bearing chamber, and the space surrounding the rotor cone upstream of the same being designed as a flow space for the cooling air used for cooling the rotor blades. In the region of the rotor cone connection, the shaft exhibits an expanded portion having an enlarged inside and outside diameter, at whose upstream end, openings are provided to allow cooling air to enter into the expanded interior space of the shaft, and, at whose downstream end, openings are provided to allow cooling air to exit into the space between the bearing chamber and the rotor cone. The expanded interior space of the shaft is sealed from the traversing interior space of the shaft by a wall for separating cooling air and sealing air. As a result, cooling air of approximately the same temperature acts on both sides of the rotor cone and the corresponding rotor disk, in the sense of a thermal compensation. Any small quantity of sealing air having a lower temperature that emerges from the bearing chamber and mixes with the cooling air, has no significant effect.
The related art of the type described and the present invention are explained in further detail below with reference to the figures. In a simplified representation that is not to scale, the figures show:
Turbine rotor 2 in
In contrast, the approach according to the present invention in accordance with
Finally, it should also be mentioned that turbine exhaust case 17 is only schematically hinted at in
Weidmann, Wilfried, Wirth, Moritz
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Executed on | Assignor | Assignee | Conveyance | Frame | Reel | Doc |
May 02 2008 | MTU Aero Engines GmbH | (assignment on the face of the patent) | / | |||
Aug 21 2009 | WEIDMANN, WILFRIED | MTU Aero Engines GmbH | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 023539 | /0396 | |
Aug 21 2009 | WIRTH, MORTIZ | MTU Aero Engines GmbH | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 023539 | /0396 |
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